Rather than responding to JahTeh in comments, can I put a couple of things here:
- Australia's overseas missions are required to have emergency evacuation plans appropriate to factors such as the level of risk, ease of exit, number of Australians in the country and so on. But in a situation such we are facing in Lebanon, the plans are only as good as the means to implement them. Despite the spit above - which is simply meant to show up more misleading arrogance from the government, 'cos I loathe them so much - for whatever reason the agreement to charter the ship fell through, the airport has been bombed and land routes are too dangerous, there's not much else that can be done easily. I was for a couple of years stationed in a country not too far from Lebanon, and our escape plans were based on the assumption that the first means of exit, the airport, would be out of action early on in any battle.
- In relation to the ongoing 'battle' to keep blogging, nice one JT. The first time I was going to give it away, I was admitted to Adrian's blogroll which was a big boost. The second time, Gerry just said "keep going". This time, you hang some guilt trip on me :-) What's a bloke to do? I'll tell you. Just keep going.
So we stop here.
2 comments:
I commented at LP some time ago that I would never buy Burmese rubies knowing their true price. The dictators of Burma find that heroin is a cheap wage for the miners even better when injected. The consequent spread of AIDS throughout the country is horrendous but no real figures are available as the country is closed. From Burmese/Indian friends I know the country is beautiful but life is cheap to the thugs in charge.
Spot on. We were also there for 3 years - left in mid 1988 just before the real shooting strated. But there had been widespread protects in March which were put down quite brutally - the figures for dead/disappeared are unknown and the western press showed little interest - the country was a lot more closed then. Regrettably in world where we "only have interests", nobody has enough interest in the place to do something about it. There is oil both on and offshore but the infrastructure is buggered. They do some nice deals with the Chinese on weaponry, though.
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